- Access exclusive content
- Connect with peers
- Share your expertise
- Find support resources
This blog was written by Bala Ramachandran, Director of Product Management, Equinix and Shrikant Brahmbhatt, Senior Technology Partner Manager, Palo Alto Networks
Enterprise AI has reached production scale, with generative AI and autonomous agents handling sensitive data and driving measurable outcomes. Traditional security models are built for network traffic, not intent, and hence cannot detect threats like prompt injection, data leakage, or agent misuse. The result is a growing gap between how fast enterprises are deploying AI and how effectively they’re securing it.
In the Equinix recent blog, we introduced the Equinix–Palo Alto Networks partnership and the Equinix Distributed AI™ Hub, integrating the Palo Alto Networks Prisma AIRS solution to deliver centralized policies, real-time guardrails and semantic threat detection across hybrid AI environments. In this follow-up blog post, we’ll explore this solution in detail, including different deployment models and common usage scenarios.
The Equinix Distributed AI Hub extends edge architecture into a distributed model, creating a secure, flexible control point that unifies the partner ecosystem.
Today’s enterprise AI adoption is highly fragmented, with teams independently deploying tools, sharing API keys, and exposing sensitive data, thus driving shadow AI, rising costs, and limited visibility. This fragmentation creates not just inefficiency, but systemic security and governance risk.
The Distributed AI Hub addresses this by introducing a centralized governance layer between enterprise environments and AI services. Deployed at strategic locations, it routes all AI traffic through a secure, optimized hub that enforces policy, manages connectivity, and delivers full observability. Most importantly, this framework enables organizations to optimize cost and performance by selecting the right model for each workload. It creates a unified hub where data, models and ecosystems connect, allowing teams to build and scale AI securely without re-engineering their infrastructure.
Security can no longer be an afterthought in distributed AI. The Equinix Distributed AI Hub embeds protection directly into the AI interconnection fabric by integrating leading AI security solutions like Palo Alto Networks Prisma AIRS.
Prisma AIRS is an end-to-end AI security platform that goes beyond network traffic inspection to understand the semantic intent of every prompt and response. Runtime Security delivery via API blocks prompt injection, jailbreaks, PII exposure, credential leakage and agentic threats in real time. In short, it catches threats that are invisible to traditional defenses.
Prisma AIRS secures AI agents and models in development with runtime defense in production, continuously validated by autonomous red teaming across 500+ specialized attacks. Integrated natively at the Equinix Distributed AI Hub gateway, it enforces consistent policies across all LLM providers and MCP servers without requiring changes to downstream applications. This gives enterprises the confidence to innovate at scale, with AI security woven consistently across their infrastructure.
Key benefits of the joint solution include:
The best way to understand the secure Distributed AI Hub is to see how it can be evolved step-by-step—not as an abstract architecture diagram, but as a working system, starting with a single application and scaling to the full enterprise AI platform. At every stage, two things remain constant: The security doesn't get more complicated and the observability doesn't fragment.
Let's start with a single application and trace the workflow. When the user hits send, the prompt first goes to the AI Gateway. The request is authenticated, then Prisma AIRS inspects the prompt for injection attacks, sensitive data and policy violations. Clean prompts proceed; flagged ones are blocked. Every interaction is logged: prompt, response, token usage, latency, cost, and AI guardrails triggered. In a few hundred milliseconds, every AI interaction is kept compliant, observable and fully auditable.
This is where the combined value of Equinix and Palo Alto Networks becomes clear: Equinix provides private, low‑latency connectivity between enterprise environments and AI model providers, without touching the public internet. Prisma AIRS adds security and observability, understanding the content and risk of every request. Together, they turn a single AI application into a governed, auditable workload from day one.
As adoption accelerates, with more teams, users and applications added simultaneously, ungoverned AI environments break down. Policies drift, costs spike unpredictably and security blind spots multiply.
In the Equinix Distributed AI Hub, governance scales cleanly. Every prompt is inspected. Every transaction is logged. The same policy that governed the first application governs the tenth.
And at scale, another reality emerges: There is no single best model. Claude, OpenAI, Gemini, Meta and Kimi all coexist. Some workloads never leave the enterprise, bringing private models into the mix. By providing a single location for Prisma AIRS API-based Runtime Security, the AI Gateway unifies security across the enterprise. It enables any application to route LLM traffic through a central control plane, ensuring consistent policy enforcement across every model and environment.
With the foundation in place, enterprises can layer in capabilities that separate a mature AI platform from a basic deployment, without rebuilding what came before.
Intelligent model routing directs simple queries to fast, cost-efficient models and complex tasks to more powerful ones, automatically and invisibly to the end user.
MCP tool integration connects external data sources to AI models without exposing enterprise systems directly to model providers. Semantic caching stores responses to common queries, reducing token costs significantly at scale. Edge deployments extend the Hub to additional Equinix locations globally, without fragmenting governance or observability.
What began as a single application with a gateway and a guardrail evolves into a global enterprise AI platform—multiple models, multiple teams, multiple regions—without breaking what came before. Capabilities layer in. Governance holds. Security stays simple and everything is observable.
This is what real AI governance looks like: built on interconnection, colocation and ecosystem from day one. And that’s the difference between the Equinix Distributed AI Hub and the fragmented AI stacks that many enterprises are struggling with today.
Within the Equinix Distributed AI Hub, Prisma AIRS can operate across two complementary interception points, providing true defense in depth:
The Scan API service is an API Intercept that integrates natively at the AI Gateway using REST APIs by embedding Security as Code directly into source code. It operates in two phases:
The request phase scans every user prompt and tool call before it reaches an LLM, blocking prompt injection, jailbreaks, PII exposure and policy violations in real time.
The response phase scans model outputs and tool responses before they're returned to the user, catching data exfiltration, toxic content and sensitive outputs that should never reach the end user.
Because inspection happens at the gateway layer, consistent policies are enforced across all models and providers, including OpenAI, Anthropic, Gemini, locally hosted models, and any combination thereof, without requiring downstream application changes.
The API Intercept catches semantic threats at the application layer, where the content of AI conversations can be inspected and acted upon before a model ever responds. This includes traffic from applications that may not have been built with the gateway in mind, shadow AI workloads, or direct API calls that bypass the application stack.
Most enterprises today have a fragmented AI security posture. Some applications have guardrails, others don't. Some deployments are governed; others connect directly to external LLMs with no inspection at all. The Equinix Distributed AI Hub with Prisma AIRS changes this situation. Policies defined once in Strata Cloud Manager are enforced consistently across every AI application, model and provider, whether traffic routes to a public LLM via Equinix Fabric®, a privately hosted model in colocation, or an agent chain spanning multiple clouds. The same guardrails apply. The same logs are generated. The same visibility, everywhere.
The era of isolated AI experiments is giving way to a more complex and consequential reality: distributed AI at enterprise scale. The models enterprises choose matter. But how they connect, secure and orchestrate those models across clouds, data centers, partners and an expanding portfolio of agentic workloads will ultimately determine who succeeds.
Learn more about how to accelerate innovation with AI infrastructure deployments at Equinix: Read the solution brief.
You may also be interested in reading Palo Alto Networks’ perspective on Securing the Future of AI and visit the Palo Alto Networks partner directory for more information.
You must be a registered user to add a comment. If you've already registered, sign in. Otherwise, register and sign in.
| Subject | Likes |
|---|---|
| 3 Likes | |
| 3 Likes | |
| 3 Likes | |
| 2 Likes | |
| 2 Likes |
| User | Likes Count |
|---|---|
| 6 | |
| 5 | |
| 4 | |
| 2 | |
| 2 |


